NBA Slam Dunk Contest 2014: Full Recap & Highlights

Terrence Ross was looking to defend the dunk contest crown against an impressive field of high-flying participants in 2014.

In one sense he did, as the East dominated the West in the 2014 NBA All-Star Dunk Contest. However, it was his Eastern Conference brethren John Wall — voted the “Dunker of the Night” — who really stole the show.

NBA legends Dominique Wilkins, Julius Erving and Magic Johnson served as judges for the event, which featured a different set of rules.

In the first round, the Freestyle Round, each dunker will have 90 seconds to do as many dunks as he wants. When that’s over, a panel of judges will then decide the winning conference.”

“The dunkers from that winning conference will get to choose whether to go first or second in the East vs. West dunking matchups that will take place in the second round, the Battle Round. Judges will pick the winner of each battle, with the first team to win three head-to-head matchups declared the winner of the competition. Yes, this means there will be no more 50s, just “winners.”

For a more comprehensive explanation of the rule changes, check out the video below from TYT Sports.

This year’s field of dunkers:

EAST:

John Wall, PG, Washington Wizards

Paul George, F, Indiana Pacers

Terrence Ross, G, Toronto Raptors

WEST:

Ben McLemore, SG, Sacramento Kings

Damian Lillard, PG, Portland Trail Blazers

Harrison Barnes, F, Golden State Warriors

Find a complete recap of this year’s dunk contest below, including GIFs, videos and more.

Battle Round

The East won a clean sweep all the way through, winning the battle round 3-0 over the West.

1. Terrence Ross Defeats Damian Lillard

Ross, who plays for the Toronto Raptors, incorporated Canadian rapper Drake in his battle round dunk — a nice through-the-legs throw down.

2. Paul George Defeats Harrison Barnes

Check out this pretty 360 through-the-legs jam by George.

3. John Wall Defeats Ben McLemore

Give Ben McLemore points for creativity, though. The Sacramento guard, donning an impressive-looking crown, leaped over legendary center Shaquille O’Neal — now minority owner of the Kings — sitting in a throne under the basket. The build-up was exciting, but the same can’t be said for the dunk itself.

It’s clear the dunk contest doesn’t have the appeal it once did. In many ways, it parallels the NFL’s Pro Bowl. We saw some format changes benefit pro football’s version of the all-star game last month. The NBA must once again go back to the drawing board and try to re-write the rules to manufacture more excitement.